Read The Lost Child Online

Authors: Suzanne McCourt

Tags: #Fiction literary, #Family life

The Lost Child (12 page)

‘We're going to Mick and Layle's to play cards,' says Mrs Daley. ‘You kids take your pillows. You can sleep on the floor if you get tired.'

Mum wouldn't want me anywhere near that Trollop. Doesn't Mrs Daley know? In the back of the Daleys' ute, I think of the Phantom riding past on Flicker, plucking me out of the ute and carrying me off to live in the Skull Cave in the Deep Woods. I think of how miracles can happen: how Mum might change her mind and let Dad come back to live with us and everything will be the same as before. I think of the whale that came into the bay and how we watched from the jetty and the whale had a baby stuck to its side like a big barnacle with a million silver bubbles floating behind. Then we arrive at Dad's house and I still haven't thought of how to escape from the Trollop.

We step over planks and bricks in the drive, and Mrs Daley says, ‘Will he ever finish it?' Off the back veranda, there is a big square kitchen with a view over the lagoon. At the table in the centre, Dad is shuffling cards with Pardie's dad and mum, Augie, and Jude. As soon as we walk in, I look for Dad's eyes but he doesn't look back at me. Instead, he laughs at my plaster arm and says, ‘Who brought George Bracken?'

Augie and Blue Daley laugh too. ‘It's a lovely dressing-gown,' says Mrs Daley, ruffling my hair.

My dressing-gown is red tartan with a gold-tasselled cord. The Daley kids have blue chenille. What is wrong with tartan? And who is George Bracken?

Layle says she's going to fry up some black duck that Mick shot. I decide I won't speak to her the whole time we're there, that is my plan. When she asks if we'd like to play cards in the bedroom, I don't look at her. Faye asks if we can first see the sunken bath and we sit around the edge and dangle our legs over the rim. Faye says how fab it is, but all I can see is Layle's big bra under the basin and my father's overalls scrunched up next to it. Mum would never leave clothes on the floor and I wonder if Dad would rather come back to live with us because Mum is better than the Trollop at keeping things clean and looking after him.

In the bedroom there's a wardrobe with sliding mirror doors, a cow-hide mat on the floor, paint patches on the walls. I decide I won't sit on that bed; instead I perch on the edge, but it has a slippery green spread and I keep sliding off. Faye knows all the card games. She says we're playing Snap and begins shuffling.

‘Your Dad's right. Boxers do wear dressing-gowns like that.'

‘Once I saw a picture of George Bracken in the ring,' says Dawn. ‘He wore red shorts and a satiny gown, not tartan.'

‘Her father ought to know.' Faye puts the cards down slowly and sneaks a look before turning them over. She wins every time.

‘Deal,' says Dad in the kitchen. ‘We haven't got all night.'

Dot curls in a ball on the bed as if she wants to go to sleep. A grey speckled moth walks down the wall close to my feet. ‘Concentrate,' says Faye, ‘or don't play.'

‘All right,'—I slide off the bed and curl into my pillow on the cow rug—‘I won't.'

The moth flops onto the floor and skittles towards me. My father has kicked his slippers off under the table. He has a hole in the toe of his sock. Augie is leaning back, his chair balanced on two legs. He says: ‘See in the local rag your brother's got another medal. Those who fought at Kokoda. Something they should've got sooner but didn't due to some kind of enquiry.'

With a little hop and flutter, the moth climbs onto the rug. Its wings are papery grey with black spots. Two long feelers flick at the air. Faye calls down. ‘I'll let you shuffle.'

‘No.'

‘You can play whatever game you want.'

‘No.'

‘They can weigh Ticker down with medals,' says Dad, ‘but with your flat feet, Augie, you were one of the lucky ones. No one with any sense would've gone if they could've stayed put.'

‘You're stupid,' says Faye to me.

‘Leave her alone,' says Dawn.

‘You should've got a medal for pushin' Bert Leak's kid into the drink and saving him from that bullet,' says Augie.

‘Don't try and make a hero out of me,' says Dad. ‘Albie Fisher's the one who should've got a medal. Ten quid and how many kids did he keep out of the firin' line by sayin' he needed them on the chicory flats? And you won't hear me blamin' Derm Murphy for buildin' a dairy the day it all began. Never milked a single cow, white feathers dumped at his gate by the bucketful, but he didn't end up with six kids dead in Borneo.'

The moth stands high on its front legs and stares at me with hard black eyes. It is close enough to squash into moth dust. I could pull off its wings like Chicken does to blowflies in the shelter shed.

‘You know how many died in Darwin?' says Dad, and I see Layle kick him under the table. Dad kicks her back. ‘Let him answer.'

‘A couple of hundred,' says Augie, ‘that's what they said.'

‘Try a bloody thousand. Maybe more. A total cover-up. That's why I told 'em what to do with their medal. When they tried to give me a stripe, I gave it right back. I said, stick your promotion up your—'

‘—Khyber Pass,' says Layle.

Faye says, ‘You can lie on the bed. It's more comfortable.'

‘I'm comfortable here.'

‘And don't get me started on that bloody ditch Ticker's digging.'

‘No, don't,' says Layle. ‘Come on kids. The duck's ready.'

We sit on a cloth on the floor and eat with our fingers as if it's a picnic. Then I get lucky. ‘I've got the wishbone! I get a wish.'

‘Only if you get the big bit.' And before I've even got a good grip, Faye has a finger inside the bone. ‘Ready?'

The wishbone snaps but I've got the big piece! ‘What'll I wish for?' I say, waving it under Faye's nose and thinking of a new bike, a yoyo, Derwent pencils like Lizzie's.

‘Wish for a win in your next bout,' says Blue Daley, snorting into his beer as if he's said the funniest thing. Faye laughs too. Then Dad and Augie. Layle says they're all stupid. Her voice sounds silky and kind and I forget my own plan and look at her for a quick second. Then I remember she is to blame for everything and I hope her throat will be squeezed tight by her own fingers. That is my wish.

I find the photograph at the back of the dresser drawer, in a brown envelope. Dad and the Trollop. Sitting up in bed. Dad has angry eyes and shadow cheeks. The Trollop holding a bedspread up to her chin. It is too much to look. I bury the photo under pencils and pens, lacker bands, the ball of string I was looking for.

When Dunc comes home for the September holidays, I show him the photo of Dad and the Trollop in bed. He looks at everything I couldn't bear to see. He says: ‘You know what this means?' I shake my head, listening for Mum in the garden. ‘It means they're divorced.'

‘What's divorced?'

He looks at me as if I'm too stupid to believe. ‘It means Dad lives with Layle. That he likes Layle better than Mum. That Mum kicked him out. It's more than a year since he's gone. That's how long divorce takes.'

‘Mum might change her mind. She might let him come back.'

Dunc waves the photo at me. ‘They are DI-VORCE-D! It is forever. They can't get back together again. That's what divorce is.' He turns to the stove. ‘You know what I think of this?' He rips the photo in two. Then in four. Then in four again. He tosses the pieces into the fire and Dad is gone forever because that's what divorce is.

I am crying silently inside so that Dunc won't see. He says he's going to meet up with Pardie.

‘You said you'd run away.'

‘I did,' he says at the door, ‘but the cops brought me back.'

Why didn't Mum tell me? What else don't I know?

‘It's not as bad for you. You hardly knew him. I was twelve when he left. How do you think it is for me?'

After he's gone, I wonder if Dunc cries silently too. But how would I know, how would anyone know, if our crying has no tears?

Chicken McCready is walking past our gate. I take my time with the latch because I don't want to talk to him. He has green teeth and smelly breath and sits behind me in class with candles hanging out of his nose. And I hate the handkerchief he wears knotted over his head even though it's ages since he had chicken pox and his grandma shaved off his hair.

When he turns the corner I lie in the dandelions like a star and listen to my heart beating in my ears. I think of Chicken throwing fits at school and how his tongue has to be found before he swallows it. And how he's always hanging around and drawing his own hopscotch next to ours and talking to himself as he jumps from square to square, saying exactly what we're saying in a girly voice. And slithering out of the tea-tree when we're in our cubby. There's a shiver in the rushes and we know it's him. If we ignore him long enough, he goes home and plays in the old cars that sit on blocks near his back fence. They were his father's cars before he disappeared. That was after Chicken's mother ran off with the Rawleigh's man. But I don't think Chicken's father ran off with someone like his mother did. Like my father did.

I would like to run off too. But I can't think of anyone to run off with, or where I'd go. I look at the sky and think I'd like to be an eagle flying high above Burley Point. And if I were an eagle with an eagle eye, could I fly high enough to see the Coorong, and Dunc in the city? Could I sweep down and rescue him in my eagle feet? Could I see Betty Cuthbert being the Golden Streak in the games in Melbourne? Could I fly above Ten Mile Rocks and see my father in the
Henrietta
pulling pots? And if a storm came up, and his boat sank on the reef, would I tell anyone or leave him there to rot? Like Mum would.

‘Sylvieeeeee. I want you to go to Mr Sweet's. There's a note on the table. You'll need to hurry or he'll be closed.'

I need to go to the dunny. Green light snakes through cracks and holes in the corrugated iron. Nasturtium stems snake through too and wave their green heads at me as if they are lost in the dark. I pull down my pants, sit on the stinky pan and keep my nose closed. From the box where Mum keeps her crosswords, I find one half done. Four down is
Arc.
I pencil in
Curve
. Eight across is
Waver
. I don't know that, so I check the dictionary with the loose pages.
Vacillate
. It fits, and connects with five down:
Wed
. I know that too. I know more words than anyone in my class and now I have to remember to make mistakes in the spelling tests so that Chicken won't say I've swallowed the dictionary. Mum knows more words than me but she still gets them wrong. Six down is not
Marry.
I scratch it out and write
Match
over the top. Then I can't stand the stink so I leave the rest for her.

Two forequarter chops,
says Mum's bird writing. I sit on the step and fold the coins inside the note. Georgie is hunched on his perch, feathers fluffed around him, not even a twitter. For the first time I think he might like to be out of his cage, flying free in the bush where we found him. What if I opened the door and let him out?

‘You had six down wrong,' I tell Mum as she runs from the pump, bucket slopping. ‘It wasn't
Marry,
it was
Match
. It didn't fit with
Vacillate
.'

‘Vas-ssss-ilate,' she says, throwing the water in a rainbow arch between the cauliflowers.

‘It's spelt with a
c
in the dictionary.'

‘It's pronounced with an
s
, like
face
.'

From the well, I hear the squeak-suck of the pump and the glug of water running into her bucket. I hear loud party voices coming from Shorty's shed and his wireless blaring out about someone
pushing up along the inside by a length gone out wide followed by a
half head before the turn strides out on the straight.
Can't she hear? Can't she tell my father's laugh from all the others? Doesn't she know Layle is there? Close enough to see her running around the garden? Doesn't she care?

Now she's back. Tears itch behind my eyes and I don't know why. ‘You get everything wrong!' I yell at her. ‘Everything.'

She drips water onto her seedling box, slowly, drop by drop. ‘Don't be cheeky.'

‘I don't want you for a mother.'

I jump up and run down the drive, across the road and onto the lagoon path. I feel hot and mean and the prickles behind my eyes have dried as stiff as the white weed on the lagoon.

I wish it was winter and the lagoon was full of oily brown water, deep enough to pole our raft into the middle. I wish I could see an eagle. And as I make the wish, I see one coming off the dunes. It drifts without a wing beat, rising high in the sky, but even far away I can see the frill of feathers on the end of each wide wing. Then it spirals into the sun and disappears and I'm not really sure I saw it at all, and the whole way to Sweet's shop, I watch the sky and wish I was Julie Walker and lived in the Deep Woods with my own falcon called Fraka and a dog called Devil. And, although I make all these wishes, by the time I arrive at Sweet's all I've seen are two maggies and a silver eye.

Just my luck. When I open the door, Chicken is there. Wearing his handkerchief hat. Smelly as a rat, though no candles today.

As the bell jangles, Mr Sweet says: ‘How're you doing, young Sylvie? About to shut up shop but I've been waitin' for you.' I know he hasn't. I ease along the counter, as far from Chicken as I can. ‘Be with you in a half, when I've fixed up young McCready here.'

Mr Sweet lifts his meat cleaver and brings it down on his chopping block, chops through a bone, chops off chops. Chicken and I watch. While he's chopping, Mr Sweet hums ‘Heartbreak Hotel' as if he is Elvis. When he's finished, he hooks up the front of the dead sheep that's left over from his chopping and sends it sliding along a rail above his head. It knocks into four dead friends who are hanging by their legs at the back of the shop.

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